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Mastering Padel Techniques

·Updated June 2026·14 min read

In padel, technique trumps raw power. This guide breaks down the eight essential skills — from continental grip to net volleys — with practice drills and a progressive learning path used by club players and WPT pros alike.

Core principle

Grip first · Net second · Walls third

Master the continental grip before anything else. Then volleys and serve — they dominate every point. Wall play separates intermediate from beginner; bandeja and smash separate advanced from intermediate.

8 essential techniques

01Foundation

The continental grip

Hold the racket like a handshake — V between thumb and index aligns with the frame edge. One grip for forehand, backhand, volleys, and serves.

  • Versatile — no grip changes between shots at the net
  • Optimal angle for wall rebounds off the glass
  • Avoid eastern/semi-western tennis grips — they limit volleys
  • Grip pressure: firm enough to control, loose enough for wrist feel

Practice Switch forehand to backhand without adjusting your hand. 50 reps daily until automatic.

02Start every point

Mastering the serve

Underhand only — ball must bounce before contact at or below waist height. Placement beats power.

  • Drop from waist height, strike with upward motion
  • Target the corner where back wall meets side wall
  • Deep serve: forces defensive returns
  • Body serve: limits opponent swing room
  • T serve down the middle: creates partner confusion

Practice Place cones in service box corners. Hit 20 serves to each target before every match.

03Defensive overhead

The bandeja

Padel's signature overhead — a slicing tray motion that keeps you at the net while neutralising lobs. Control, not power.

  • Sideways stance under the ball, racket at shoulder height
  • Downward slice creates backspin — ball stays low
  • Target opponents' feet or deep back wall
  • Purpose: maintain net position, not finish the point

Practice Partner feeds lobs. Focus on consistency over pace — 30 bandejas per session.

04Aggressive overhead

The vibora

The viper — bandeja's aggressive sibling. Adds topspin and pressure when the ball sits up nicely.

  • Use when you have time and want pressure without full smash commitment
  • Effective against defensive lobs and to change rhythm
  • Mix with bandejas to keep opponents guessing
  • Choose bandeja for control; vibora when attacking

Practice Only attempt after bandeja is reliable. Start slow — topspin timing takes months.

05Finish points

The smash

Padel's primary weapon — but patience matters. Wait for the right ball; punish it when it comes.

  • Flat smash: maximum power, risk of back-wall rebound
  • Topspin smash: safer margin, ball dives away
  • X3 smash: ball exits over the back wall after glass contact
  • Place down the middle, at the body, or to side walls

Practice Set a rule: only smash balls above shoulder height. Reduces errors.

06Padel's edge

Wall play

What separates padel from tennis — using glass walls intelligently after the bounce.

  • Read trajectory: where will the ball be after glass contact?
  • Let the ball come off the wall — don't play into the glass
  • Back wall: usually defensive lobs or deep drives
  • Advanced: wall volleys, chiquita off glass, double-wall angles

Practice Solo rallies against the back wall. Track rebound height and speed.

07Reset & attack

The lob

High arcing shot to push net players back, buy recovery time, or surprise with offensive globos.

  • Defensive: 2–3 m above rackets, deep to back glass
  • Offensive globo: lower, faster, just over reach
  • Must land deep — a short lob is an invitation to smash
  • Creates space to recover court position

Practice Aim for the back glass line. Depth matters more than height alone.

08Net dominance

Volley technique

Most points are won or lost at the net. Short punch, firm wrist, minimal backswing.

  • Ready position: knees bent, racket at chest, continental grip
  • Push don't swing — use the ball's pace
  • Contact in front of body, immediate recovery
  • Place at feet, down the middle, or to side walls
  • Advanced: drop volley (dejada), drive volley, reflex blocks

Practice Net feeds from a partner — 100 volleys focusing on placement, not power.

Progressive learning path

1

Beginners (0–6 months)

Focus: Fundamentals

  • Continental grip mastery
  • Basic serve and return
  • Simple volley technique
  • Introductory wall play
2

Intermediate (6–18 months)

Focus: Consistency & control

  • Bandeja for defensive overheads
  • Consistent deep lobs
  • Volley variety and placement
  • Back wall shot mastery
3

Advanced (18+ months)

Focus: Power & strategy

  • Smash variations including X3
  • Vibora with spin control
  • Advanced wall techniques
  • Strategic shot selection

Practice tips from the pros

Quality over quantity

20 minutes of focused technique beats an hour of mindless hitting. One skill per session.

Video analysis

Record yourself and compare with WPT footage. Visual feedback accelerates correction.

Slow-motion practice

Execute movements slowly to build muscle memory. Speed follows correct patterns.

Professional coaching

Invest in lessons early. Fixing bad habits later costs far more time than learning right.

Overcoming plateaus

Inconsistent contact

Solution: Return to grip and preparation. Slow the swing and prioritise clean contact before power.

Poor shot selection

Solution: Study pro matches for when bandeja beats smash. Build a simple if-then decision framework.

Defensive play only

Solution: Set goals for offensive attempts per game — viboras and smashes when the ball allows.

Rackets for technique development

Control and sweet spot matter more than power while learning. These frames forgive mishits and reward clean contact.

Common questions

How long to master padel techniques?

Basics in 3–6 months; advanced overheads in 1–2 years. Continuous refinement is normal at every level.

Lessons vs videos?

Use both — videos for concepts, coaches for habit correction. Even 4–6 lessons early saves months of frustration.

Most important technique first?

Continental grip, then volleys and serve. These appear in every point.

Practice alone?

Serve, wall rallies, shadow swings, and wall volleys work solo. Partner play remains essential for timing.

Keep learning

New to padel? Start with our beginner's guide. Ready for equipment? Browse control rackets or read our wall-play guide.

Put it on the court

Technique builds over months, not days. Pick one skill, drill it with purpose, then bring it into your next match.